Synopsis
Leading writers on arts, history, philosophy, science, religion and beyond, themed across a week - insight, opinion and intellectual surprise
Episodes
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Three Hundred Years Hence
04/03/2019 Duration: 13minComedian and author Viv Groskop explores five forgotten feminist futures; from the book that predicted the internet, to the world where men have been wiped out in a gender-specific plague. Episode 1/5: Three Hundred Years Hence, by Mary Griffith, often described as the first utopian novel written by a woman, fifty years before the first female suffrage amendment.
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Cary Grant
15/02/2019 Duration: 13minSarah Churchwell celebrates various leading men of the silver screen from the 1930s and 1940s.She says, "the truth is, I would have done five essays on Cary Grant, but my producer wouldn't let me... Grant embodied the unimaginable." He was also excellent at romantic comedy and drama, and this is now examined. Cherished even.Producer: Duncan Minshull
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Joel McCrea
14/02/2019 Duration: 13minSarah Churchwell celebrates various leading men of the silver screen, from the 1930s and 1940s.Joel McCrea starred in westerns and crime capers and refused some movies if the characters did not possess moral fibre. So he turned down The Postman Always Rings Twice with Lana Turner. He said he wanted to be the regular guy who 'rode off into the sunset'. But was this his real appeal?Producer: Duncan Minshull
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Charles Boyer
13/02/2019 Duration: 13minSarah Churchwell celebrates various leading men of the silver screen, from the 1930s and 1940s.Charles Boyer played killers and gigolos, conmen and psychopaths. He was good at romantic comedy and his Frenchness made him debonair and suave. But it was the voice that was the giveaway - 'deep and purring, with a heavy French accent'. It encouraged this writer's early penchant for escapism.Producer: Duncan Minshull
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Frederic March
12/02/2019 Duration: 13minSarah Churchwell celebrates various leading men of the silver screen from the 1930s and 1940s.Frederic March had an amazing range, playing a lot of different types, and he should be admired for this. Off set, however, he comes under a different sort of scrutiny - "everything was harder in real life than on the effortless silver screen."Reader: Duncan Minshull
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Clark Gable
11/02/2019 Duration: 12minSarah Churchwell celebrates various leading men of the silver screen, from the 1930s and 1940s:First off is Clark Gable and Gone with the Wind of course. And countless other films where this classic star could exercise his physical presence. And, according to the writer, his appeal lay as an 'object fought over by women'. Is this his only talent?Producer: Duncan Minshull
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Make Some Noise
08/02/2019 Duration: 13minWriter and broadcaster AL Kennedy concludes her exploration of voice. Today, make some noise before it's too late.Written and read by AL Kennedy. Producer: Justine Willett
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Your Master's Voice
07/02/2019 Duration: 13minWriter and broadcaster AL Kennedy continues her exploration of voice. Today, she compares the soothing radio voices of her childhood with the angry voices of today's media.Written and read by AL Kennedy. Producer: Justine Willett
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Words, Words, Words
06/02/2019 Duration: 13minAcclaimed writer AL Kennedy continues her exploration of voice. Today, she looks at the voice on the page - and the importance of telling our stories.Written and read by AL Kennedy. Producer: Justine Willett
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Not Killing Conversation
05/02/2019 Duration: 13minAcclaimed writer and broadcaster AL Kennedy continues her exploration of voice. Today, she looks at the importance of conversation and of being heard.Written and read by AL Kennedy. Producer: Justine Willett
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Voices, Voices, Everywhere
04/02/2019 Duration: 13minUsing her own voice recordings, writer AL Kennedy explores the power of voice and what it can say about us.Written and read by AL Kennedy. Producer: Justine Willett
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25/01/2019
25/01/2019 Duration: 13minAndrew Martin's five essays that muse on the county of his birth and upbringing:Sitting on a bench in Scarborough station, he recalls the Yorkshire coast of his youth. This takes in Whitby and Bram Stoker. Robin Hood Bay and the roofs of its houses. Filey and its rock-pools. And Hull.Producer: Duncan Minshull
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24/01/2019
24/01/2019 Duration: 13minAndrew Martin's five essays that muse on the county of his birth and upbringing.He thinks he's best able to evoke a Yorkshire steeped in the past, but what about the future. Yorkshire independence? Its young people? The world of retail? There is much to consider.Producer: Duncan Minshull
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23/01/2019
23/01/2019 Duration: 13minAndrew Martin's five essays that muse on the county of his birth and upbringing:This time, he ponders questions of class in God's Own County. "My dad was one of the men who went to work in suits, being a clerk on British Rail. He got on with the men in overalls, but he tried to stop me speaking like them." The author has enjoyed class mobility, and after recollections of his upbringing, he gets to hear from a friend about the 'County Set'.Producer: Duncan Minshull
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22/01/2019
22/01/2019 Duration: 13minAndrew Martin's five essays that muse on the county of his birth and upbringing:This time, Andrew ponders the age-old question to do with Yorkshire and Lancashire rivalries - who comes out on top? Time to delve deep into each region's culture to come up with an explanation. But surely this author is biased?Producer: Duncan Minshull
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21/01/2019
21/01/2019 Duration: 13minAndrew Martin's five essays that muse on the county of his birth and upbringing: To begin, he is getting up there by train from London, thinking about his 'Tyke' identity. Also, who are the exemplars of God's Own County? - it's time to name some names. Then, before long, he arrives in York...Producer: Duncan Minshull
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Paul Batchelor on Ode to Psyche
11/01/2019 Duration: 13min1819 was a stunningly fertile year for John Keats, when he wrote five of the greatest odes in the English language and actually introduced words and phrases never heard before - "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness.....", "Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty....." . "O for a beaker full of the warm South....."Five leading contemporary poets each celebrate a single ode.5. Paul Batchelor on Ode to PsycheKeats wrote "Ode to Psyche" in spring of 1819 and it was the first of his great odes in that year, , which include "Ode on a Grecian Urn" and "Ode to a Nightingale". Poet Paul Batchelor explores what is perhaps the least familiar of the great 1819 odes for contemporary readers. Producer: Beaty Rubens
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Sasha Dugdale on Ode to a Nightingale
10/01/2019 Duration: 13min1819 was a stunningly fertile year for John Keats, when he wrote five of the greatest odes in the English language and actually introduced words and phrases never heard before - "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness.....", "Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty....." "O for a beaker full of the warm South....." Five leading contemporary poets each celebrate a single ode.4. Sasha Dugdale on Ode to a NightingaleProducer; Beaty Rubens
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Sean O'Brien on Ode on Melancholy
08/01/2019 Duration: 13minIn 1819, John Keats wrote five of the greatest odes in the English language. Five leading contemporary poets each celebrate a single ode.2. Sean O'Brien on Ode on Melancholy1819 was a stunningly fertile year for John Keats, when he wrote five of the greatest odes in the English language and actually introduced words and phrases never heard before - "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness.....", "Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty....."The multiple award-winning poet Sean O'Brien explores the depth and meaning of Ode on Melancholy, both uncovering Keats' mastery of the language and sharing how important the poem has been to him personally since the loss of fellow-poet and friend Michael Donaghy, who used to recite the ode by heart. Producer : Beaty Rubens
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Alice Oswald on Keats's Ode on a Grecian Urn
07/01/2019 Duration: 13min1819 was a stunningly fertile year for John Keats, when he wrote five of the greatest and most frequently anthologised odes in the English language, fresh-minting phrases now in common use , such as "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness.....","Beauty is Truth, Truth Beauty....." and "O, for a beaker full of the warm South....." All this week, leading contemporary poets each celebrate a single ode, explaining what it means to them. From her home in rural Devon, Alice Oswald brings together her unique blend of poetic sensibility, classical scholarship and personal impressions as she explores Keats' great poem, Ode on a Grecian Urn.Classically educated poet and former gardener Alice Oswald has won many awards and is commonly considered to be amongst the greatest poets writing in English today. Producer: Beaty Rubens